Imagine Dragons' Dan Reynolds talks success, touring and more

FILE - In this Jan. 31, 2014 file photo, Dan Reynolds of Imagine Dragons performs at The Bud LIght Hotel, in New York. Imagine Dragons set a record last week on the Billboard Hot 100 with the anthemic rock jam, “Radioactive,” which has spent 77 weeks - and counting - on the chart. (Photo by Greg Allen/Invision/AP, file)

Despite recently winning a Grammy, reaching double platinum status with its debut album and having three international hits, some folks still wonder who — or what — the band is.

“People are still saying, ‘Who are Imagine Dragons? Like, why do I keep hearing this name?’” Reynolds said. “I think it is a pretty strange thing to live in this day and age where we’re selling all these records and it’s all going well, and we have still kept some anonymity. I think, in our case, it’s something we kind of cherish.”

Reynolds and his bandmates may not be able to blend in for too long. Imagine Dragons set a record last week on the Billboard Hot 100 with the anthem-like rock jam, “Radioactive,” which has spent 77 weeks on the chart, beating Jason Mraz’s 76-week run in 2009 with “I’m Yours.”

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Reynolds, 26, talked recently about the band’s hits, new music, arena tour and why it might not release a fourth single following the hit “Demons,” ”It’s Time” and “Radioactive,” which won the best rock performance Grammy and has sold 6.6 million tracks.

Reynolds: That’s something that comes with time. We’ve had some opportunities to have some major exposure visually and to kind of get our personalities out there more that we turned down just because I feel like the way that I would want people to find out who we are is organically … and through their own interest and their own curiosity, rather than seeing some commercial or movie.

… I remember growing up listening to U2 and I didn’t even know what Bono looked like. I didn’t even know his name. It got to a point where I was invested so much that I wanted to know who Bono was — not to say that I would compare us to U2 because that’s one of my favorite bands of all-time and it feels, like, sacrilegious.

Reynolds: I don’t really know how to comprehend it, I think. I feel like this last year has been full of events that I don’t know if I’ll fully understand till years down the road. I think right now I’m a little overwhelmed by it all.

Reynolds: That’s been the most important part of the band from the beginning. … With our radio team, we were never like, “This is the single! Push this to road!” It literally just started off on its own. … We never wanted to skip steps. We always wanted to grow slowly and take our time with things.

Reynolds: I don’t think so. … At this point, we’re trying to pull back from the reins and say, “OK, we don’t want to overkill the record on people’s ears and force it upon people to some extent.” I feel like it’s been on the radio so much that it’s almost been overwhelming to us.

Reynolds: We’ve really been recording on the road … When we get home from tour, we’ll comb through those demos and pick out the best ones and bring them to a live band setting. … Right now, I have a good 40 or 50 demos that I’ve been writing over the last two years.

Reynolds: We want to take a little time off. … Sometimes you can put out an album that’s maybe not as good as it could have been because you rushed it.

Reynolds: You come and you understand what Imagine Dragons is about, and what the vision is about, and what the feeling is and what the visual is, instead of just us coming and playing our 10 songs like they sound on our CD. I feel like my favorite bands growing up, I went to their concerts and walked away feeling like I was part of that band and that experience.

Reynolds: She’s definitely singing some Ariel, you know, some “Little Mermaid” here and there. … She’ll probably get interested in music. … I don’t know if I’m going to let her get into that industry. … But maybe at the end of the day, she’ll just do it anyways. My mom didn’t want me to do it and I did it.